Palm Beach Juvenile Correctional Facility was turned into a fight club several years ago when it was controlled by a company that's since left Florida.

Staffers at a juvenile detention facility once forced its teenage detainees to fight each other while they bet on the matches, according to a new report.

The Palm Beach Juvenile Correctional Facility was marred by rounds of allegations from past detainees and their parents about the rowdy behavior inside the eastern Florida facility, the Miami Herald reported Wednesday.

They allegations went as far back as March 2014, when Rashad Ables went to the center’s infirmary with a broken now. He first said someone elbowed him in the face during a basketball game, but later admitted it was from a staff-arranged fight, the Herald reported.

Finally, that June, he told investigators two staff members turned a closet into a fighting pen where another teen beat down on him.

“You send your kids there, you know they are not angels but they are not that bad either,” Mary Ables, Rashad’s mother, told the Miami Herald. “It was more like a prison, and all sorts of bad habits were picked up. It was not a place for kids.”

He got into a skirmish with another boy in the closet after dinner one night in June 2014.

Counselors David Croney and Vinny Valentino Jones, Sr. were captured on video supervising the brawl. Croney told Rashad “to put on my shoes and go in the closet,” the then-17-year-old claimed.

He lost the fight, the Herald reported. Croney and Jones declined to send him to the infirmary, told him to go to his room and gave him a glove packed with ice to heal his wounds.

The staffers told him to say he fell in his room and hit his head, causing what turned out to be a broken eye socket.

David Croney, 40, and Vinny Valentino Jones Sr., 23, were sentenced to three years probation for child neglect.

(Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office)

Croney and Jones were each eventually sentenced to three years probation after they were charged with child neglect and resigned, according to the Herald.

Youth Services International, the center’s operator, eventually gave up the 118-bed center in 2016 amid allegations about the fighting, as well as sexual abuse and lack of medical care, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

The company was also sued for defrauding Florida for billing the state for services not rendered — prompting it to leave the Sunshine State.

YSI also settled in March 2016 a class action lawsuit brought by several former detainees, the Herald reported.

Former resident Steven Santos signed a declaration of support for the lawsuit, in which he detailed how staffers turned him into an enforcer.

“Many of the fights at West Palm YSI were set up by the staff, and the staff would bet on the fights,” wrote Santos, who was in for robbery, aggravated battery, resisting arrest and carrying a concealed weapon.

One guard “would tell me from time to time who to beat up to keep the dorm under control,” he said.